sentara medical group - amga medical group payor mix medicare 37.44% ... action steps for scorecard...

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Evolution of an Ambulatory Care Management Model as Part of Patient-Centered Medical Home

Sentara Medical Group

Michael Charles, MD, MPH Medical Director-Clinical Effectiveness Mary M. Morin, RN, MSN, NEA-BC

Vice President, Nurse Executive Sentara Medical Group

OBJECTIVES

• Describe the development and implementation of a comprehensive ambulatory RN Care Management and Coordination model designed for targeted patient populations within a large integrated healthcare system’s multi-specialty medical group.

• Compare and contrast the impact of ambulatory RN Care Managers on all-cause medical admissions, all-cause medical readmissions, Emergency Department visits, perceptions of mental and physical health, advance care planning, and the total of cost of care for targeted populations of complex, chronic disease patients.

• Describe the innovative strategies used to further evolve the ambulatory RN Care Management model to include Population Health RNs to provide chronic disease management and prevention of progression.

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Sentara Healthcare

• Integrated Healthcare System

• Southeastern Virginia, Northern Virginia, Western Virginia, and Northeastern North Carolina

• > 2 million in Hampton Roads

• > 500,000 in Blue Ridge

• > 375,000 in Northern Virginia

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Sentara Healthcare

• 126-year Not-for-Profit Mission

• 27,000+ Members of the Team

• 12 Hospitals; 2,727 Beds; 3,799 physicians on Staff

• 13 Long-Term Care/Assisted Living Centers

• Extended Stay Hospital

• Sentara College of Health Sciences

• Sentara Home Health

• Sentara Health Plan (Optima)

• Sentara Medical Group

Virginia

North Carolina

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About Sentara Medical Group • 180 practice locations

• 800 primary care and specialty physicians, nurse anesthetists and advanced practice clinicians

• Over 600,000 patients served in the past 24 months across Northern Virginia, Southeast Virginia and Northeast North Carolina

• 18 specialties

• Largest group within SQCN – Sentara Quality Care Network comprised of ~2400 providers

• PCMH – 38 Level 3

– Diabetes - 96

– Heart Stroke - 78

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Sentara Medical Group Today

• 152 practice locations

• 692 primary care physicians,

specialists, nurse anesthetists

and advanced practice

clinicians and more than 2,400

employees.

• 538,750 patients served in the

past 24 months across

Northern Virginia, Southeast

Virginia, and Northeast North

Carolina.

• 38 NCQA Level 3 PCMHs

• 17 specialties

Sentara Medical Group Payor Mix

Medicare 37.44%

Trigon/Anthem Keycare PPO 17.60%

Sentara Products 16.38%

Commercial 9.08%

Self Pay 5.13%

Federal Government 4.52%

Medicaid 4.35%

Trigon/Anthem Priority HMO 2.71%

Other 2.79%

*Sentara has a Medicare Advantage program and a Clinical Integrated Network (CIN)- SQCN

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Example of Crisis Management In healthcare, we are looking at major

changes in the immediate future. We are moving from fee for service to value based

reimbursement. How are we going to manage populations?

How can we do all this and still see our patients?

Our situation is not life or death but still needs to be addressed with a sense of

urgency. This is an example of crisis management

with some lessons we can learn.

“Good Friday Miracle”

Miracle - an effect or extraordinary event in the physical world that surpasses all known human or

natural powers and is ascribed to a supernatural cause.

We can attribute this to a higher power and I cannot argue about that. My focus today is on the “lower powers” that managed the crisis with exceptional skill and with disregard for their own personal safety.

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Boeing 737 • 120’ long

F/A-18 Super Hornet • 60’ long

High Alpha

Lessons Learned • The pilots did not panic. They did what they were

trained to do. • Preparation is key. If you are prepared for

challenges and change, you can adopt much easier.

• They worked as a team to overcome their challenge. In healthcare, we need to do the same.

• Realize that even if the situation looks hopeless, act and don’t be resigned to fate or outside influences.

Guiding Principles and Goals

Guiding Principles Goals

Improved Clinical

Outcomes

Increased Patient Access

Performance Improvement of

Operations – Bend the Cost

Curve

Provider/Staff/Patient

Satisfaction

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• Patient-Centered

• Data Driven Decision

Making

• Standardization

• Practice at Highest Level of

Clinical License

Building the Care Model • 2007-2009 Implemented EMR (EPIC)

• 2009-2011

– Dedicated approach to redesign work

• Transformation of Care Team established

• Guiding Principles established

• NCQA PCMH provided framework for expansion

• Piloted embedded and telephonic Care Management Model (2011)

• 2012

– Care Model Established and Expanded

• Practice standardization

• All Primary Care in Hampton Roads region

• Care Management redesign - “hybrid” model high cost high utilizer

• 2013

– Pharm D and Social work

– Care Management evolved into intense transition care management and other targeted patient population

• 2014

– Ongoing evolvement of care management services to support population management

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Essential components of office redesign

• Efficiency and standardization

• Monthly Medical Home meetings

• NCQA Recognitions

(PCMH- 38 All Level 3, DM- 81, HS- 63)

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Redesign Body of Work • Define roles and responsibilities

• Same Day appointments

• Care Management

• Best Practice Advisories

• Report Cards

• Chronic disease registries

• Preventive Care Outreach

• Standardized workflows & Care processes

• Transition of Care- 7 day hospital f/u

– Hospitalist/PCP/Specialty Collaboration

– Medical Neighborhood meetings

– Primary Care Note

– Service Agreements

• PharmD

– Perform chart review

• Advance Care Planning

• Integration of Behavioral Health

• Utilization review –ED/Readmissions

• Patient Experience

• Generic Prescribing Initiative

• Care Plans

• Huddles

• Alternative Visits

– Group visits

– Evisits

– Virtual visits (MDLive)

• Clinical Summaries

• Medical Home Meetings

– Innovation and best practice sharing

– Review report card

– Performance improvement

– Multidisciplinary team

• Referral tracking

• Patient Portal

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Medical Home Meetings

Multidisciplinary team

Home health, Optima & Sentara care managers, lead nurse

Standard monthly agendas

Case Management case reviews - Optima and Sentara

Readmission cases - local vs system issues identified

Scorecard review with practice - provider & patient level data

Action steps for scorecard areas of opportunity

Innovation and best practice sharing

Shared learning with specialist

Essential components of office redesign

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Data drives performance

Practice Scorecard

Interactive scorecard for every practice

Practice, Provider and Patient level data

Reviewed Monthly with action steps

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Example of Practice Report Card

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Build and Sustain Culture with Team

Engagement

“Carefully designed, evidence-based care processes, supported by automated clinical information and decision support systems, offer the greatest promise for achieving the best outcomes from care for chronic conditions” (IOM, 2001)

• Physician Clinical Protocol Committee (PCPC)

• Practice workflows and processes

• Disease focused Care Plans and Best Practice Advisory

• Registry management

• Manager Provider Dyad

• Multidisciplinary focus on improvement

• Leadership development

*Institute of Medicine, 2001. Crossing the quality chasm: A new health system for the 21st century.

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Journey to Population Management

Cutting Edge 2 Pilots

2011

Early Adopters

VIPs

New Model

10 Sites

2012

Spread of Best Practices across SMG

Intense Transition

Clinical 3

Medical Discharges

ED 1st Call

2013

Standardization across SMG

48 Sites

Medicare Advantage

Pharmacy

Social Work

2014

Care Model Expansion and Innovation Targeted Populations CCM Medicare Advantage 2015

Population Management

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Vision and Goals for SMG Care Management

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SMG Patients

VISION Improve the health and well-being of our patients in the

communities we serve

GOALS Reduce ED Visits

Reduce Admissions Reduce Readmissions

Improve Quality of Life Reduce Total Cost of Care Reduce Total Cost of Care Improve Staff Satisfaction Improve Clinical Outcomes

Improve Patient Satisfaction Facilitate Advanced Care Planning

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Complex

Chronic

Disease

Manage Chronic Disease/Conditions

and Prevent

Progression

Prevent Chronic Disease/Conditions, Identify

and Prevent Progression

Health Maintenance, Ongoing Acute and Preventive Medical Care

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VIP Population (Very Important Patients)

TOP OF THE PYRAMID

942 of 2591 Total VIP 260 VIP Sentara (VIPS) 192 VIP Optima (VIPO)

306 VIP Indigent/Self-Pay (VIPIS) 122 Current VIPS 62 Current VIPIS Transition - VIPT

VIP Population

• Chronic Diseases and/or Conditions

• Benefit from “intense” community-based Care Management

• Currently not engaged with Case Management services (except Optima)

VIP

SMG Care Management

• Chronic Diseases and/or Conditions

• Post-hospitalization/medical discharges

• At-Risk

• Rising-Risk

• Benefit from community-based Chronic Care Management (CCM) not Complex Chronic Care Management (CCCM)

• Payor-Based (Incentives, At-Risk Agreement)

• Prevention of Chronic Disease/Conditions, Identify and Prevent Progression

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High Cost/High Utilizers

• RN Ambulatory Care Management Model

• Very Important Patients (VIPs)

• Flags and Metrics (Scorecards)

• Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCHM)

• Advanced Care Planning

• Past Utilization

SMG RN Care Management

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• SMG PCP Sites

• PCMH

• RN Care Managers

• RN Population Health Management

• Team-Based Care

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SMG Care Management Targeted Populations

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• Payer

• Medicare/Medicare Advantage

• Senior, Adult, and Pediatrics

• Disease/Condition (e.g. CHF Class 2, Diabetes A1C 6-9, Behavioral Health, Pain, etc.)

• Prevent Chronic Disease/Condition based on Risk Factors – Key Component

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SMG RN Care Management Radically Different Model

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SMG RN Care Manager – Role • Establishes and maintains patient-centered relationships

• Conducts comprehensive initial assessments

• Identifies and determines needs

• Develops Plans of Care

• Conducts ongoing clinical assessments and monitoring of patient status

• Provides coaching, education, and support

• Manages resources (e.g. medications, referrals, transportation)

• Manages transitions of care

• Conducts Advance Care Planning

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SMG RN Care Management

• Job Descriptions – BSN and Certification Requirements

• Core Competencies • Patient Lists by Populations • Assignments • Expectations • Patient Letter from PCP • Engagement • Contact Letter, Brochure • Work Flows • SMG, Optima (Health Plan), and CIN EMR • Meetings with HH and Inpatient CC • Education/training

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SMG RN Care Management

• 150 (avg) VIP/MHCM

• + New “enrollees” from VIPx List identified as candidates for CM at later date

• CHF, Pneumonia, AMI, COPD, Diabetes, Renal to Medical

• Transition

RN Care Management Strategies

• ED Visits or Hospitalizations ≥ 3/year → First-call Strategy with MHCM • Intense Transition Management → Post-Discharge → Medical (Surgical) → 30+ Days (90+)

→ Payors

SMG Care Management Outcomes

• ED Treat and Release Episodes

↓41%

• All-Cause Admissions

↓46%

• All-Cause Readmissions

↓19%

• 7-Day Follow-Up

↑76%

• Total Cost of Care

↓ 17%

• Advanced Care Plan

↑23%

SMG Care Management

Outcomes: SF 12

• Functional and Psychological Health

• Pre and Post RN Care Manager Engagement

• 48% Improvement 1st Stages Depression

• 6% Improvement Physical Health

• 43% Improvement Mental Health

SMG Care Management Patient

Satisfaction • > 93% agree overall health status and access

has improved

• > 96% agree they get help when needed

• > 96% agree understanding and knowledge of condition/disease has improved

• > 96% satisfied with MHCM care and services

SMG RN Population Management

• Job Profile – RN Population Health Management • Core Competencies • Risk Stratification • Assignments • Expectations • Engagement • PCP Letter/Brochure • Work Flows • Education/Training • Specialty Certification

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SMG RN Population Health Management– Role

• Establishes and maintains patient-centered relationships

• Conducts initial and ongoing assessments

• Identifies and determines needs

• Develops Plan of Care with patient

• Provides coaching, education, and support

• Coordinates resources (e.g. medications, referrals, transportation)

• Manages registries for care opportunities

• Conducts pre-visit planning for Care Team

• Identifies at-risk and rising risk patients (risk factor stratification)

• Provides transition management and patient triage

• Refers complex patients to RN Care Managers

• Facilitates Advance Care Planning

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RN Population Health Management

• 300-500 Patients

• Rising-Risk

• Gap Closure

• Telephonic

• Multiple Practices/Providers

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Data Toolkit

SMG RN Care Management Tools

• Chronic Disease Registries

• 30-Day Re-admissions

• ED Visits

• 7-Day Post-Hospital Discharge

• Care Manager Productivity

• “My List”

• Admission, Discharge, Transfer (ADT)

Diabetic Patient Registry

30-Day Readmission

ED Visits for Patients with an SMG PCP Provider

Follow-up Visits within 7 Days of Hospital Discharge

RN Care Manager Productivity

Report

My List

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2010: PCMH

2011: RN Care Manager (2) Embedded and Telephonic in 2 PCP Sites, CHF

2012: RN Care Managers (5) –

Multiple Practices, Multiple

Encounter Types 11 Sites, VIP (High

Cost/High Utilizers) with

Complex, Chronic Diseases

/Conditions

2013: Intense Transition Management; 39 Sites, Medical Discharges from Hospital/ED (9 RN Care Managers, 1 SW)

2014: Risk Stratification Processes and Payer (MAA) Population Management; Utilization-Focused (14 RN Care Managers, 1 SW)

2015: RN Population Health Management; PCP Office, Complex Diseases/Conditions, Rising-Risk, Disease Management and Progression Prevention

Evolution of SMG RN Care Management Model

Lessons Learned

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Leadership Lessons Learned

• Hire

• Position Fit

• Personality

• Autonomy

• Team

• Provider-Care Manager Expectations

• Role Clarity

• Data

• Space

• Technology

Questions?

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